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Le 10 mappe che spiegano il mondo
Le 10 mappe che spiegano il mondo | Tim Marshall
Uno dei pi bei libri di geopolitica. The Evening Standard In un mondo sempre pi complesso, caotico e interconnesso, questo libro una guida utile e concisa. Newsweek Non c' storia senza geografia Per comprendere quel che accade nel mondo abbiamo sempre studiato la politica, leconomia, i trattati internazionali. Ma senza geografia, suggerisce Tim Marshall, non avremo mai il quadro complessivo degli eventi: ogni volta che i leader del mondo prendono decisioni operative, infatti, devono fare i conti con la presenza di mari e fiumi, di catene montuose e deserti. Perch il potere della Cina continua ad aumentare? Perch lEuropa non sar mai veramente unita? Perch Putin sembra ossessionato dalla Crimea? Perch gli Stati Uniti erano destinati a diventare una superpotenza mondiale? Le risposte a queste domande, e a molte altre, risiedono nelle dieci fondamentali mappe scelte per questo libro, che descrivono il mondo dalla Russia allAmerica Latina, dal Medio Oriente allAfrica, dallEuropa alla Corea. Con uno stile chiaro e una prosa appassionante, Marshall racconta in che modo le caratteristiche geografiche di un paese hanno condizionato la sua forza e la sua debolezza nel corso della storia e, cos facendo, prova a immaginare il futuro delle zone pi calde del pianeta. NOTA ALL'EDIZIONE EBOOK Alcune mappe all'interno del volume sono state ruotate di 90 gradi per permetterne una visualizzazione ottimale anche ai device in bianco e nero e con gli schermi pi piccoli.
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rwmg
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rwmg
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Pickpick

The author looks at various countries around the world and shows how their geography helps or hinders them in their attempts to expand, develop, or defend themselves. Fascinating and a welcome aid to understanding the stories behind the news.

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rwmg
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29 likes1 stack add
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Bookwormjillk
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This was interesting, but dated at this point- it was published in 2016. I read it for #FoodAndLit #SouthKorea but the Latin American chapter was my favorite.

Texreader Sounds really interesting 8mo
Kristy_K I have this sitting on my bookshelves still unread. Worth the read still or too irrelevant now? 8mo
Bookwormjillk @Kristy_K I think it‘s still worth the read since it wasn‘t too long, and gave some good history behind what‘s happening in the world today. I wish this author would update the book though. 8mo
Kristy_K @Bookwormjillk Thank you! 8mo
Catsandbooks How cool! 🙌🏼🇰🇷 8mo
52 likes5 comments
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steph_phanie
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Pickpick

⭐️⭐️⭐️½
This is a very informative book about geopolitics, but it is too out of date at this point. Thus, I spent a lot of time researching the timeline and further development of various conflicts and economic interests between 2015 and today. I would love to read an updated version and wonder if one is in the works. I'm hesitant to rate it a Pick for this reason, but it's still a decent starting point for understanding geopolitics!

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RaeLovesToRead
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Pickpick

Tim Marshall makes geopolitics easy to understand by personifying countries and regions, telling the stories of their history and motivations in a relatable way. He sometimes strays too far into giving his own opinions, but I learned so much about the world that I wouldn't hesitate to recommend this book to anyone who dreads the geography questions in a pub quiz.

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Lucy_Anywhere Great book! And one I recommend to all my students. His sequel to this (tagged) is also worth checking out 2y
Oryx Nice review. Just seen that it's 1.89 on Kindle, so have got it ❤️ 2y
RaeLovesToRead @Lucy_Anywhere @Oryx The sequel is 99p on Kindle, but I'd already purchased it from Waterstones!!!! 🙈🙈 Oh well, I may be able to get him to sign it when I go to see him speak next month! 2y
57 likes1 stack add3 comments
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Connster
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Been having a tough time recently with one thing and another. Resuming Litsy + bath bomb time to try to ease the strain a little. This bomb is from Lush. It made a delicious pattern as it dissolved 🛁📚🗺️🌎

Ruthiella Hope you feel better soon. ❤️ 2y
19 likes1 comment
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DisneyFan
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Mehso-so

Broad high level discussion of 10 most pressing current geo-political border conflicts on the globe. I say discussion because author‘s biases were annoyingly obvious. 20 -30 pages is not enough to provide a meaningful understanding of any of these hotspots, but for a 10,000 foot view or initial introduction, it was okay.

#bookspinbingo
#September2022

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losmith
Pickpick

6/10

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gclews
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Pickpick

This is a relevant book for now. For someone with not much understanding of the subject, it was easy to understand and enjoyable to read.

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RaeLovesToRead
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Here is my Bookspin for October! @TheAromaofBooks

Contemplated recycling last month's list as I've not done very well this month... but then I realised how many books I've bought since then, so probably not going to be able to resist 😁

Hope I can dive into it for October! I've got a few secret favourites that I'm hoping come up in the bookspin draw 😅

TheAromaofBooks Yay!!! 3y
30 likes1 comment
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inlovewithmyshelf
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Pickpick

This book explains the history, sociology, psychology, inventions, wars, political manoeuvrings and much more about our world today, as seen through the lens of geography. I wish I‘d learned this back in school as it would have saved me a lot of head scratching since then. But hey, everyday‘s a school day, right? Learn something new every day! 💡

10 likes1 stack add
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zurazureen
Pickpick

understands the geographical borders of the countries around the world and the problems arise

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Hooked_on_books
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Pickpick

This is an interesting look at how geography and, in some cases, the arbitrary drawing of lines, has impacted the success, behaviors and even existence of many of the world‘s countries. I learned a lot from it. I‘m using it for #India, but it would also work for China, Japan, the Koreas, Iran, Iraq, Pakistan, and Israel.

#ReadingAsia2021

Librarybelle I have this on my to read list! 4y
BarbaraTheBibliophage Ooh — I hadn‘t thought of this one for #readingasia! 4y
BarbaraBB This sounds so interesting 4y
Crazeedi What an interesting sounding book 4y
58 likes2 stack adds4 comments
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Well-ReadNeck
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Pickpick

Interesting Non-fiction that explains how geography leads to political issues and positioning.

74 likes4 stack adds
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umbrellagirl
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“Why do you think your values would work in a culture you don‘t understand?”

45 likes3 stack adds
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Caroline2
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Getting all my ducks in a row ready for #ReadingAsia2021 😉 👍

BarbaraBB Screenshotting! (edited) 4y
squirrelbrain Ooh I have Long Road to the Deep North.... I feel a #buddyread coming on... but I‘m wavering a bit with it as it‘s supposed to be a toughie. Shall we be brave together?! 4y
Caroline2 @squirrelbrain Yay 😃 buddy read!!!! 👏 🎉🥳 let‘s do it! 💪🏼 4y
See All 9 Comments
Librarybelle This is amazing! 4y
Caroline2 @Librarybelle I‘m ready to go! 😉 I was surprised I already had so many to be honest. 🤷‍♀️ 4y
Jess861 Nice! I have Pachinko on my list so far 🤷‍♀️ lol 4y
Caroline2 @Jess861 it‘s hard isn‘t it! I had lots for Pakistan, India and China. But some of the other countries....?! 🤷‍♀️ 4y
youneverarrived Pachinko is so good!! 4y
Caroline2 @youneverarrived Oh good! I‘ve had it on my shelf a year now so I‘m looking forward to finally getting to it!!! 😆 4y
108 likes9 comments
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Megabooks
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Pickpick

@Lucy_Anywhere you were right, this is a fascinating intro into geopolitics! I haven‘t studied anything like this since undergrad 20 years ago.

It was interesting to look both back and forward at the natural and drawn borders of countries and how this shapes global human, governmental, and resource interactions. 4⭐️

@TheAromaofBooks This is my actual #bookspin 👍🏻

TheAromaofBooks You're making awesome progress!!! 4y
Megabooks @TheAromaofBooks thanks!! Going for another blackout! 4y
Lucy_Anywhere I‘m glad you enjoyed it! The same author has also written a book about flags - more historical than political but still really interesting 4y
Megabooks @Lucy_Anywhere interesting!! I‘ve always wondered about why flags looks like they do. 4y
84 likes2 stack adds4 comments
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Megabooks
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Here‘s my card! I swear I will not get caught up in #BookspinBingo...again...lol. 😂 It was really great for my #TBR though. 👍🏻

Thank you once again, Sarah!

(Cindy, I finally did fall asleep! 😂😂)

squirrelbrain You‘ll probably end up doing the whole board again....! 🤣 4y
Cinfhen Another stellar board!!! Let‘s see how fast you work your magic 💕 4y
Megabooks @Cinfhen @squirrelbrain y‘all know me too well!! 🤦🏻‍♀️😂 At least I gave myself some free spaces this time! 4y
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Cinfhen I like the use of free spaces, Meg 🧡👍🏻📚 4y
TheAromaofBooks Yay!!! Good luck!! 4y
KVanRead I loved A Complicated Kindness - bought it an airport on a long day of travel and basically ignored my family (to the best of my ability) until it was done😂 4y
Megabooks @KVanRead I actually started that one last night!! I‘m not very far, but really enjoying it. 4y
bookladyreads Oh my goodness. Luster was such a good book. I read it two weeks ago and I‘m still trying get my thoughts together. 4y
Megabooks @bookladyreads it was one of my BOTM picks, so I‘m extra excited now! 4y
Lucy_Anywhere Prisoners of Geography is a great intro to geopolitics - I always get my IB students to read it at the start of the course! 4y
Megabooks @Lucy_Anywhere fantastic! I am a former poli sci major, and it sounded good at an audible sale. It‘s up next after I finish 4y
78 likes12 comments
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Querencia
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Pickpick

What an entry in the geo-politics field! ❤ I'm fairly new to this perspective and it's so informative.
"In peacetime, most of the world is getting ready for war." A funny world we live in ???
#politics #geography #world #nonfiction

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Avatar.of.sonia
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Pickpick

Just finished this book, and I dont want to add any spoilers in my review, but it was a surprisingly interesting book! It explains in layman's terms how political decisions are mainly affected by geological constraints, which is something I never really had that clearly in my head. At first, I was worried it would be a dry book, but the author does a wonderful job explaining everything in a way it makes it fun! I recommend it for sure!

ramblingsofareader I really enjoyed this too! Great review 4y
Avatar.of.sonia @ramblingsofareader I was indeed surprised it would be this good, to be honest!
4y
9 likes1 stack add2 comments
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Kav138
Pickpick

A nice introduction on how geography influences history. I think he may try to cover too much and sacrifices depth.

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ErinSBecker
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Panpan

This was an interesting read for me, but mostly because after the first two chapters I was reading it from a critical viewpoint to identify all of the author's terrible biases. History and current events seem roughly accurate (I'm not a history scholar), but always presented through an imperialistic perspective and glossing over social aspects of historical geography. Not recommended except from a critical standpoint.

ErinSBecker This was my second #doublespin for April. I'm still plodding through my second #bookspin (tagged). @TheAromaofBooks 5y
TheAromaofBooks Great review!! 5y
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ErinSBecker I just got a stack add for this review! 😂 5y
craftysilicate Of course I have not read this specifically, but I feel like a lot of authors who set out to explain history through a single physical factor like geography fall into a kind of determinism where the history of, say, imperialism unfolded the way it did because it was preordained by mountain placement. There must be books about this kind of thing that don't oversimplify so much? I want to believe? 5y
ErinSBecker @craftysilicate so true! I'm sure there are better books, but probably not many that will appeal to a broad audience. It wasn't the oversimplification itself that bothered me, though, so much as the blatant apologetics for slavery and genocide. 5y
ErinSBecker @craftysilicate oh, and the chapter on the Arctic which was all about how it's so great that all of these natural resources are opening up and that shipping lanes are going to be shorter, and glossed over the absolute catastrophe that is global warming. He actually said shorter shipping lanes, because we can go through prev frozen waters, will reduce carbon emissions! I mean, come on! 5y
craftysilicate @ErinSBecker Yeah, you know, that does seem like it would overshadow everything else a little bit. (I think one sometimes leads to the other, like this type of oversimplification shores up the apologetics because oh if this was predetermined by geography then the author doesn't have to reevaluate his ideas at all, but possibly this is missing the point.) I don't even know what to say to the Arctic thing, that is a deeply bizarre line of logic 5y
43 likes1 stack add8 comments
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ErinSBecker
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Vladimir Putin says he is a religious man, a great supporter of the Russian Orthodox Church. If so, he may go to bed each night, say his prayers and ask God: 'Why didn't you put some mountains in Ukraine?' #firstlinefridays

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ErinSBecker
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The chapter on Africa is infuriating. The DRC's mineral wealth "condems it to bring exploited by outsiders", but South Africa's advanced development is due to "its natural wealth of gold, silver and coal". The impact of slavery on the continent's economy gets one paragraph, 90% of which is dedicated to explaining that Europeans didn't invent slavery! The Arabs did it first and "the Europeans followed suit"! Jesus Christ!

renegade ".....the Arabs did it first?" . Now, I will have to buy this book ASAP ? for my next engagement. This book was in my 'to read list'. 5y
renegade @ErinSBecker Btw, if you're reading this book then you must also read 5y
23 likes3 comments
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ErinSBecker
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Argh, no! I am so sick of this fallacy! People in agricultural and industrialized societies spend a HUGE proportion of time on acquiring basic food and shelter compared with hunter/gatherer societies. This has been WELL documented. Agricultural led to LESS leisure time, not more. And there is ample evidence of "ideas" (art, philosophy, political systems) in non-agricultural cultures. This is such imperialistic BS.

Singout Thank you! I'm inclined to agree. What do you think about the trope that larger cities=more diversity of roles, including more academic/spiritual ones? 5y
ErinSBecker @Singout good question. I don't think I've heard that one exactly. I've heard a variant - that larger cities = more food stores = more free time to specialize. But I've then seen anthropological studies comparing the number of hours spent in acquiring food and shelter across ag and h/g societies. I'm inclined to think that non-ag societies have plenty of role specialization that just hadn't been recognized and valued by Western academics. 5y
ErinSBecker @Singout I'm no expert, but given the documented negative consequences of agriculture and cityfication on leisure time and overall health (more exposure to pathogens and parasites, lower nutrient diversity), I get pretty skeptical when I see glowing paeons to "civilization" like this. 5y
20 likes3 comments
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ErinSBecker
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I was really enjoying this until got to the chapter on the USA. Falls into standard rhetoric traps denying agency to the Native Nations of the region ( e.g. "Their descendents would go on the deny the native inhabitants their freedom, but that was not the intention of the first settlers." ) And then some anti-Mexican rhetoric ("it's proximity causes America problems, as it feeds its northern neighbor's appetite for illegal labour and drugs").

ErinSBecker No mention either of the role slavery played in the US "acquisition" of Texas. 5y
ErinSBecker Also apparently in 1848 "it was obvious that the remaining Indian nations would be subdued: there was no threat to the USA." The Indian Wars continued through the Civil War, with multiple Nations mounting sustained armed resistance. For a more accurate account, strongly recommend tagged book. 5y
22 likes3 comments
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JeffyRoo
Pickpick

Fascinating geopolitical look at our planet. How the natural world impacts on politics and people.

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Bookworm_97
Bailedbailed

A Journey around the World

2 likes1 stack add
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mcbeth528
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Geography is everything and this book is fantastic so far, especially while snuggling with my dog and a hot cup of coffee on a lazy Sunday morning.

Bookworm_97 I can totally understand ✅ 5y
4 likes1 comment
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sm7ma
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mcbeth528
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Not sure how or why this arrived on my doorstop but I‘m pretty pumped up. Perhaps it‘s #JolabokaflodSwap ?

monalyisha Not from me! But your #Jolabokaflodswap package should arrive today! 5y
monalyisha Hello! Just double-checking to make sure that your package arrived safely. 5y
mcbeth528 @monalyisha It did!!! Turns out my Dad sent a surprise book package 😄 will be opening yours shortly and can not wait!! Thank you!! 😊 5y
monalyisha @mcbeth528 Phew! I was worried that it would be more of a target because the box is decorative. Enjoy! Merry Christmas Eve! 5y
10 likes4 comments
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sm7ma
Pickpick

I don‘t regret buying this book and hope to read Tim Marshall‘s other titles! The chapter on China was very informative and much needed considering China‘s fast growing Economy, the Belt and Road initiative, the occupation of Xinjiang and the recently leaked documents about the Chinese Concentration Camps in East Turkistan. #prisonersofgeography

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anokokona
Pickpick

Like some other people mentioned, some chapters are more interesting than the others, and some chapters are just informative (without so much of arguments). But the author covers different aspects not only the « geographic » parts but cultural part for example, and I learned a lot (I like the Africa and the Middle East chapters); I enjoyed reading this book and I will try to read it again soon.

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sm7ma

This is my current read & first Litsy. It got off to a good start. Some chapters were more interesting than chapters. I felt other chapters had facts I considered irrelevant as far as the title of the book & country are concerned. I have the blue cover edition. Sometimes I just stare at how pretty the book is. I can't wait to finish it. I would definitely recommend picking it up. This is a book to read to discover what the media does not cover.

LitsyWelcomeWagon Welcome to Litsy! Hope these #Litsytips by @RaimeyGallant http://bit.ly/litsytips and #LitsyHowTo videos: goo.gl/UrCpoU are helpful. There‘s so many fun things to do: book exchanges, buddy reads, photo challenges and more! #LitsyWelcomeWagon
5y
RaimeyGallant Welcome! 5y
sm7ma @RaimeyGallant Thank you :) 5y
See All 8 Comments
StillLookingForCarmenSanDiego Welcome to Litsy 💖📖💖 5y
rretzler Welcome to Litsy! 📖 5y
sm7ma @rretzler Thanks 😊 5y
sm7ma @LitsyWelcomeWagon Wonderful! Thank you! 🌼🌼 5y
4 likes1 stack add8 comments
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bookandbedandtea
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I'm still (so painfully slooowly) working on this. In the last few days I've read the Africa and Middle East sections which were both infuriating. This book is informative but it gets a bit dry for me so it's both interesting and a struggle to read. I'll be putting it aside again for a few weeks.

12 likes1 stack add
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jenniferw88
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KarenUK Wow.... this looks fascinating! 💕👍 5y
Cinfhen Bet this would be good for THE CHASE 🤓 5y
Lucy_Anywhere Such a good read! I teach global politics, and it's a very accessible explanation of geopolitics 5y
Jess861 I've had this book in my to read pile for a while - I can't wait to read it! 5y
69 likes4 comments
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TrymSorsdal

Straight to the point and hugely educational. A must-read!

RaimeyGallant Good to know! And welcome to Litsy! #LitsyWelcomeWagon Some of us put together Litsy tips to help new Littens navigate the site. It's the link in my bio on my page in case you need it. Or if you prefer how-to videos, @chelleo put some together at the link in her bio. @LitsyWelcomeWagon 5y
rretzler Welcome to Litsy! 📖 5y
StillLookingForCarmenSanDiego Welcome to Litsy 💖📖💖 5y
CoffeeNBooks Welcome to Litsy! 📚 5y
Eggs Welcome to Litsy 📚🤗 5y
6 likes2 stack adds5 comments
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bookandbedandtea
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I'm reading about geopolitics and the section on China begins thusly. I'm partly amused by the turns of phrase and partly alarmed that I keep running into this US/ China/ South China Sea problem every few days since my daughter was stationed in Guam! 😠😫😭
Worry aside, this chapter on China is fascinating.

TheBookgeekFrau ❤️🍀🙏💪 6y
bookandbedandtea @C.Perone Thank you! That string of emojis actually does bring me comfort...I think it's time to find a tattoo artist. #MilitaryMom ❤🍀🙏💪 6y
TheBookgeekFrau @bookandbedandtea lol They do!! And yes, it is! Wish I could send you to my guy, but that'd be one hell of a commute 😁 6y
bookandbedandtea @C.Perone It sure would! I'll ask around and find someone nearby. 😉 6y
10 likes4 comments
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bookandbedandtea
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I'm finding this slow going yet interesting. I'm only through the first chapter (Russia) and it's already opened my mind to new ideas about the way countries relate to one another.

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bookandbedandtea
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Up next

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MichaelK
Mehso-so

Struggled to get through this. Extremely dry writing on a very interesting topic.

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MichaelK
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Subway reads 🚇📘 Should be a quick read on an interesting topic.

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keithmalek
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keithmalek
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keithmalek
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keithmalek
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keithmalek
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